Alumnae Archives | Page 2 of 5 | Ashley Hall

From left to right: 
Mary Gordon Baker ’77Laurie A. Peek ’67Rhett Ramsay Outten ’82Anne Smith Hutson ’77 |  
Dolly Lockwood Lipman ’82 

The 2017 Ashley Hall Outstanding Alumnae Award Winners

Mary Gordon Baker ’77 | Crandall Close Bowles ’65 Professional Achievement Award

For more than 30 years, Mary Gordon Baker has elevated the legal profession, both in the public and private sectors. Since 2015, she has served as a federal Magistrate Judge, helping administer two alternative courts. These are the BRIDGE program, which is the first federal drug court in South Carolina, and the REAL program, which is designed to reduce recidivism among high risk federal defendants who are on supervised release from federal prison. She has previously served as an Assistant Federal Public Defender in Charleston and was a co-editor of a project of the South Carolina Bar, entitled Pattern Jury Instructions for Federal Criminal Cases in the District of South Carolina. She has worked as an Assistant U.S. Attorney at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the criminal division and also served as Senior Litigation Counsel and as a Deputy Chief to the Criminal Division while with the U.S. Attorney’s Office. While working in private practice in Columbia, she worked on the Pro Bono subcommittee of the South Carolina Bar and worked with Young Lawyers’ Division of the South Carolina Bar. She has been a frequent lecturer at the National Advocacy Institute in Columbia, South Carolina, the training facility for lawyers in the Department of Justice.

Laurie A. Peek ’67 | Martha Rivers Ingram ’53 Excellence in the Arts Award

Laura is an artist and photographer whose work straddles the line between documentary and fine art. Her photography has been characterized as “finding the extraordinary in the ordinary.” Laurie’s photographs frequently take a closer look at everyday objects and environments. Her unassuming subjects—wet leaves, watery reflections, or even something as simple as a crushed can—help us see our world afresh, transforming the mundane into the magical. She exhibited widely in the Hudson Valley and New York City metro area, including the Blue Hill Art & Cultural Center, Carriage Barn Arts Center, Edward Hopper House Art Center, Gallery 66, Garner Arts Center, Garrison Arts Center, Piermont Flywheel Gallery, Pomona Cultural Center, Ridgefield Guild of Artists, Rockland Center for the Arts, Rockefeller State Park Preserve Art Gallery, and Upstream Gallery. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Boston Globe, Brooklyn Paper, City Limits, The Progressive, Soho News, and Village Voice, as well as in film documentaries, including the 2003 Oscar-nominated Tupac-Resurrection and the 2012 Koch.

I am particularly excited to share the news that this year, we have a double hitter. We are honoring two alumnae, who both individually and often together, have devoted countless hours to volunteering and serving their communities, from presiding over boards to manning the phones. In the true spirit of service, they frequently come together as a formidable team – while each stands apart as an inspiration for all of us. And, what’s more, they both happen to be members of my very class of 1982.

Rhett Ramsay Outten ’82 | Co-recipient of the Fern Karesh Hurst ’64 Award

In both Charleston and Greenville, South Carolina, Rhett’s efforts on behalf of her community have been longstanding and legion. She was philanthropy chair of Delta Delta Delta. She has been a member of the Junior League of Greenville since 1988, serving as a nearly new shop volunteer, on the training team task force, as a Dinosauer exhibition volunteer and a sustaining member since 2000. Rhett twice served on the board of the Greenville County Museum of Art Board member, for which she chaired an antique show that raised $490,000. She was involved for several years with Meals on Wheels of Greenville County, she was both a Volunteer and Route driver.

As part of a grassroots after school outreach program from 2005-2009, Rhett provided home cooked meals twice a month and served to the at risk children in Title 1 schools who had no parental supervision. She has also volunteered for Greenville Cancer Society; the Greenville Heart Association; and served on the Parents Council of Christ Church Episcopal School. She has served on numerous boards, including those of the Governor’s Mansion Foundation; the South Carolina Arts Commission; the Gibbes Museum of Art and the Charleston Area Convention and Visitors Bureau. She was president of the Ashley Hall Alumnae Association Board. What’s more, organizations have come to appreciate Rhett’s secret weapon: It’s simply impossible to say no to her!

Anne Smith Hutson ’77 | Dewar Gordon Holmes Award

Given to an Ashley Hall alumna who has given her time, insights and talents to Ashley Hall, this award honors Dewar Gordon Holmes, a member of the class of 1926. Mrs. Holmes was a faculty member, a mentor for Ashley Hall girls and the first woman to serve as a trustee (Secretary). She also played a pivotal role in the creation of the Ashley Hall Foundation.

This year’s recipient possesses all the qualities of Dewar Gordon Holmes: she is a woman of integrity, outstanding citizenship, and she has given, without reservation, decades of devoted volunteer service to Ashley Hall.

Anne performs any task that is asked of her in an effort to further the mission of our school. This was true as a student, a parent and an alumna. Her senior page in the Spiral was to be a forecast of her years of volunteerism, first as a student and again as a member of the Parents Association and the Alumnae Association. Anne co-chaired the Gala for two years, the Alumnae Capital Campaign, served as Co-Chair for the Food & Beverage Committee in 2011 and has volunteered countless years for the Phone-A-Thon.

Anne and her family have always supported Ashley Hall and she follows this tradition. Her classmates can always count on her selflessness especially as she always offers to host and/or cater her class events.

Dolly Lockwood Lipman ‘82 | Co-recipient of the Fern Karesh Hurst ’64 Award

A little about Dolly…she raises her hand, rolls up her sleeves and rises to every occasion. She has been a very active member of the Junior League since 1989 and is currently on the board of directors, and was honored with the Dee Holmes Norton Sustain Award in 2010. She chaired the Special Sales at the Nearly New Shop in Atlanta for several years, and, after moving back to Charleston in 1998, she started working on the Whale of a Sale, chairing it twice. What’s more, she is member of the Rebecca Motte DAR Chapter, and has served on the board of director there, too. As a board member of the Gibbes Museum Women’s Council, she chaired the inaugural Art of Design six years ago and was served as board president. A member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Dolly was in charge of the Sunday School program for two years and am a member of the Women’s Altar Society. She has even volunteered as a model for Wine, Women and Shoes fundraiser for the Florence Crittendon Home for two years. She has also been a member of the Ashley Hall Alumnae Board for many years—and for the past two years I have been the alumnae weekend chair.

Congratulations to this year’s Ashley Hall Outstanding Alumnae!

Kick Off Summer With this Ashley Hall Alumnae Family Event!
Tuesday, May 30 | 6:15pm
Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park (The Joe!)
sponsored by the Young Alumnae Council

Perfect for Alumnae families of all ages! Mix and mingle pre-game at a fun-filled picnic. Hamburgers, hot dogs, drinks plus beer and wine will all be provided. First pitch is at 7:05pm where the Riverdogs will take on the West Virginia Power. Tickets ensure special seating on Doby’s Deck!

Don’t miss out and don’t leave the kids behind—this is an Alumnae Family Event! 

Tickets:
$20 for adults | $10 kids 12 and younger
$10 for Young Alumnae (Class of 2002 and younger)

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Since the school’s boarding school days, Fathers’ Morning has been a spring break tradition at Ashley Hall. Borders would eagerly await their fathers who had come to pick them up for the holiday, showing them around their classes and introducing them to friends.

Today, Fathers’ Morning is still marked by classroom visits and special programming. From dissecting a squid together in science lab to competing in a relay race on the campus lawn, it’s a special time for both fathers and daughters’ to spend time together on campus.

A heartfelt “thank you” to all of our families and alumnae who supported the Chicora Elementary School gift-giving campaign. This morning in North Charleston, 568 bags filled to the top with new toys, books, school supplies and uniforms, were distributed to our young friends at Chicora. Over 20 cars acted as “sleighs” behind the big Ashley Hall activity bus which was packed to the ceiling with gift bags. A huge PQV to EEC Director and Santa’s special elf, Dana VanHook, and her team of incredible volunteers who pulled this huge effort off seamlessly for the 17th year. The best part of the visit—seeing the children’s faces light up when seeing Santa Claus and a gift bag with their name on it! We believe! Do you?  

Ashley Hall is pleased to announce the addition of its new school-based Health Center led by Director of Ashley Hall Health Services —and alumna!—Tiffin Dowling Lamoreaux ’01. “Think of it as Ashley Hall’s Urgent Care Center,” says Tiffin. Research shows that more students return to class after visiting a school-provided nurse practitioner versus a school nurse. There are many medical conditions that may have previously required a parent to take their child to their primary care provider that can now be managed on campus thus allowing the child to remain at school. Tiffin will work closely with primary care providers to ensure that there is continuity of care. “With a focus on preventive care and health maintenance, the goal is to keep our students healthy, so they can thrive in class.” The benefits of a school-based health center also extend to faculty and staff. By providing routine and preventative health maintenance as well as acute care, Tiffin can reduce faculty and staff related health-related absences and see lower out-of-pocket medical costs. It’s a winning proposition campus wide.

Ashley Hall Head of School, Jill Muti, and the Board of Trustees are proud to name its newest building The Elizabeth Rivers Lewine ’54 House for Global Studies in honor of Ashley Hall Alumna and Charleston native Elizabeth Rivers Lewine. Located adjacent to the campus at 179 Rutledge Avenue, The Elizabeth Rivers Lewine ’54 House for Global Studies is the hub of Ashley Hall’s signature Global Studies Program which is designed to integrate global issues into the school’s curriculum.

This special dedication took place September 29 during a celebration marking the successful completion of the Global Studies Program Initiative, a $4 million fundraising campaign. On the naming of the building, Head of School, Jill Muti, stated, “The Ashley Hall community is thrilled to honor Elizabeth in this way. Through her love for Ashley Hall’s mission and initial leadership gift to the Centennial Campaign championing scholarship and program for students, in addition to her endorsement of the need for a robust global studies curricular focus, Elizabeth’s generosity will impact Ashley Hall students for generations to come.”

The 18th-century home was purchased by Ashley Hall in 2013 and renovated to serve the unique needs of the global studies curriculum which addresses: International Law; Class, Race, and Gender studies; as well as co-curricular activities like the Model United Nations, language immersion programs, and international travel abroad opportunities.

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Ashley Hall is a K-12 independent school for girls, with a co-ed preschool, committed to a talented and diverse student population. We consider for admission students of any race, color, religion, and national or ethnic origin.
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